An international colloquium was organized by the Cerpac and held atPaul Valéry University in April 2003 that focused not only on theAfrican-American neo-slave novels published in the 1960s but also onthe more recent neo-slave narratives written in the 1980s and 1990sby, African, African-American and Caribbean writers such as FredD'Aguiar, David Dabydeen, Charles Johnson, Caryl Phillips… amongothers. After the success of the colloquium and its proceedings(2005), a second volume of papers entitled « Revisiting SlaveNarratives II » is going to be published to cover some of the manywriters not included in the first. Details of the authors and worksexamined in the first volume can be found on the Cerpac website:http://recherche.univ-montp3.fr/cerpac. Priority will be given topapers examining new authors.The following names may serve as a starting point although not as alimit : Elizabeth Alexander, David Bradley, André Brink, BarbaraChase-Riboud, Michelle Cliff, J. California Cooper, David AnthonyDurham, Beryl Gilroy, John Hearne, Manu Herbstein, Lawrence Hill,Paule Marshall, Valerie Martin, Robbie Mc Cauley, Susan Lori Parks,Lawrence Scott, Simone Schwarz-Bart, Lalita Tademy… Novels, youngadult fiction, short stories, poems and plays can be examined inrelation to the original 18th- and 19th-century slave narratives andto the 1960s first wave of neo-slave novels.Contributions about visual artists like Renée Green, David Hammons,Isaac Julian, Glenn Ligon, Kerry James Marshall, Adrian Piper, KaraWalker … are also welcome. This publication should interest all thoseworking in the Caribbean field, anglophone or francophone, as well asthe African and African-American/Canadian field, in Literature,Cultural Studies or the Visual Arts.Please submit a 500-word abstract with a short bio by June 1, 2006 toJudith Misrahi-Barak <judith.misrahi-barak_at_univ-montp3.fr>. An answerwill be given by July 15. The final deadline to send the completedpaper is January 31, 2007.